For the last few weeks, I’ve been working deeply with teams that are struggling to integrate societal violence with daily mundane work plans. Here are some of the things I’ve heard:
“I dropped my child off at school today, and I’m still processing Uvdale. I feel like I should be past this, but I’m not. I don’t want to work today, but it’s not like I can take weeks off every time something like this happens.”
“I don’t know if my colleagues understand or have context for how racial violence makes me feel as a person of color. I reached out to them for support and their response made me feel like I don’t even know if I should be on this team.”
“I don’t even know what’s important anymore. This just feels like so much.”
This is all the time. How do we practically (and with boundaries) stay connected to what’s happening in the world and our country when it feels overwhelming to do so? What does this look like personally, and what does this look like for teams?
This is a good moment to refresh and remind us (myself included) of the most common practice my team and I use to balance the ongoing grief of being social impact stewards in times of violence, chaos, and loss.
Far too often, I see businesses and organizations approach their team with these inquiries once a shooting, racial violence, or disturbing incident has occurred. When someone is actively upset, many times they don’t know exactly how they’d like to be supported - that rational part of their brain isn’t as active as their tender heart. In those moments, they just need to be held.
You can ask a series of questions like this, in a survey or in 1:1 meetings:
No workplace policies or practices will erase the discomfort inherent in being vulnerable. It’s important to prepare yourself for the inevitable “I need to move this quickly because it’s heavy” feeling when creating office-wide policies to respond to current events.
It’s also important to allow each person to determine their own practices and create team procedures that honor everyone’s needs. These questions should be asked privately, to allow for opting in and opting out. And - the way your team integrates current events will have an impact on the way your organization/business integrates issues of equity and justice into its general strategy, so some level of collective discussion is appropriate. Gotta love nuance!
I’m holding our collective mental/emotional health with tenderness and care. I’m with you.
Nikki